Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (starvation)
24,951 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The Drosophila glutathione S-transferase D genes encode a family of isozymes. We have determined the amino acid sequence of a new member of this family by nucleotide sequence analysis of a genomic DNA clone. The open reading frame of this intronless gene should encode an isozyme subunit of 211 amino acids. This sequence has significant homology to the E. coli stringent starvation protein, SSP, which is also a protein of two identical 211 amino acid subunits. The two proteins have very similar overall amino acid composition as well. It is possible that SSP may be a glutathione S-transferase(s) in E. coli or is evolutionarily related to glutathione S-transferases. Because SSP is known to be tightly associated with the RNA polymerase holoenzyme during purification, it is conceivable that Drosophila glutathione S-transferase(s) may potentially interact with the transcription machinery in a fashion similar to SSP's interaction with E. coli RNA polymerase holoenzyme.
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PMID:Drosophila glutathione S-transferases have sequence homology to the stringent starvation protein of Escherichia coli. 173 92

The activities of peroxisomal beta-oxidation, cytosolic and microsomal epoxide hydrolase as well as soluble glutathione S-transferases have been determined in the livers of alloxan- and streptozotocin-diabetic male Fischer-344 rats. Five, seven and ten days after initiation of diabetes serum glucose levels were elevated 3.6-, 5.7- to 6.2- and 6-fold, while the activities of peroxisomal beta-oxidation and cytosolic epoxide hydrolase were elevated 1.5- and 2.5-fold, 1.4- and 2.7-fold and 1.3- and 2.0-fold, respectively. The activities of microsomal epoxide hydrolase and glutathione S-transferases were reduced to about 71% and 80% of controls. Application of 10 I.U./kg depot insulin twice a day for 10 consecutive days to alloxan-diabetic individuals approximately restored the initial glucose levels and enzyme activities except for peroxisomal beta-oxidation. Starvation of Fischer-344 rats for 48 hours and 5 days similarly resulted in a 1.3-fold to 2.1-fold and 1.2- to 1.6-fold increase in peroxisomal beta-oxidation and cytosolic epoxide hydrolase activity, respectively. Microsomal epoxide hydrolase was significantly decreased to 57% and 61% of control activity whereas glutathione S-transferase was only marginally reduced to 91% and 92%. Except for glutathione S-transferases initial enzyme activities were restored upon refeeding within 10 days. These results are similar to those obtained upon feeding of hypolipidemic compounds with peroxisome proliferating activity, and may indicate that high levels of free fatty acids or their metabolites which are known to accumulate in liver in both metabolic states may act as endogenous peroxisome proliferators.
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PMID:Effect of diabetes and starvation on the activity of rat liver epoxide hydrolases, glutathione S-transferases and peroxisomal beta-oxidation. 268 56

Depletion of hepatic glutathione in male rats by starvation caused a significant increase in microsomal glutathione S-transferase activity, which was not affected by acute ethanol pretreatment. An additional depletion in fasted rats by diethylmaleate (0.5 g/kg) caused a further increase in the enzyme activity, but this increase was delayed in ethanol intoxicated rats. Although ethanol caused a small increase in hepatic microsomal lipid peroxidation in control animals, this effect of ethanol was not observed in diethylmaleate treated rats and thus was apparently not responsible for the delay in enzyme activation. It is suggested that the activation of microsomal glutathione S-transferase activity towards 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene in glutathione-depleted rat liver may be produced by changes in thiol/disulfid ratio and/or some reactive oxygen species.
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PMID:Effect of ethanol on the microsomal glutathione S-transferase activity in glutathione-depleted rat liver. 401 36

The PHO81 gene is thought to encode an inhibitor of the negative regulators (Pho80p and Pho85p) in the phosphatase (PHO) regulon. Transcription of PHO81 is regulated by Pi signals through the same PHO regulatory system. Elimination of the PHO81 promoter or its substitution by the GAL1 promoter revealed that stimulation of the PHO regulatory system requires both increased transcription of PHO81 and a Pi starvation signal. The predicted Pho81p protein contains 1,179 amino acids (aa) and has six repeats of an ankyrin-like sequence in its central region. The minimum amino acid sequence required for Pho81p function was narrowed down to a 141-aa segment (aa 584 to 724), which contains the fifth and sixth repeats of the ankyrin-like motif. The third to sixth repeats of the ankyrin-like motif of Pho81p have significant similarities to that of p16INK4, which inhibits activity of the human cyclin D-CDK4 kinase complex. Deletion analyses revealed that the N- and C-terminal regions of Pho81p behave as negative and positive regulatory domains, respectively, for the minimal 141-aa region. The negative regulatory activity of the N-terminal domain was antagonized by a C-terminal segment of Pho81p supplied in trans. All four known classes of PHO81c mutations that show repressible acid phosphatase activity in high-Pi medium affect the N-terminal half of Pho81p. An in vitro assay showed that a glutathione S-transferase-Pho81p fusion protein inhibits the Pho85p protein kinase. Association of Pho81p with Pho85p or with the Pho80p-Pho85p complex was demonstrated by the two-hybrid system.
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PMID:Functional domains of Pho81p, an inhibitor of Pho85p protein kinase, in the transduction pathway of Pi signals in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. 782 64

The yeast ENA1/PMR2A gene encodes a cation extrusion ATPase in Saccharomyces cerevisiae which is essential for survival under salt stress conditions. One important mechanism of ENA1 transcriptional regulation is based on repression under normal growth conditions, which is relieved by either osmotic induction or glucose starvation. Analysis of the ENA1 promoter revealed a Mig1p-binding motif (-533 to -544) which was characterized as an upstream repressing sequence (URSMIG-ENA1) regulated by carbon source. Its function was abolished in a mig1 mig2 double-deletion strain as well as in either ssn6 or tup1 single mutants. A second URS at -502 to -513 is responsible for transcriptional repression regulated by osmotic stress and is similar to mammalian cyclic AMP response elements (CREs) that are recognized by CREB proteins. This URSCRE-ENA1 element requires for its repression function the yeast CREB homolog Sko1p (Acr1p) as well as the integrity of the Ssn6p-Tup1p corepressor complex. When targeted to the GAL1 promoter by fusing with the Gal4p DNA-binding domain, Sko1p acts as an Ssn6/Tup1p-dependent repressor regulated by osmotic stress. A glutathione S-transferase-Sko1 fusion protein binds specifically to the URSCRE-ENA1 element. Furthermore, a hog1 mitogen-activated protein kinase deletion strain could not counteract repression on URSCRE-ENA1 during osmotic shock. The loss of SKO1 completely restored ENA1 expression in a hog1 mutant and partially suppressed the osmotic stress sensitivity, qualifying Sko1p as a downstream effector of the HOG pathway. Our results indicate that different signalling pathways (HOG osmotic pathway and glucose repression pathway) use distinct promoter elements of ENA1 (URSCRE-ENA1 and URSMIG-ENA1) via specific transcriptional repressors (Sko1p and Mig1/2p) and via the general Ssn6p-Tup1p complex. The physiological importance of the relief from repression during salt stress was also demonstrated by the increased tolerance of sko1 or ssn6 mutants to Na+ or Li+ stress.
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PMID:Repressors and upstream repressing sequences of the stress-regulated ENA1 gene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae: bZIP protein Sko1p confers HOG-dependent osmotic regulation. 985 77

Considerable evidence suggests that oxidative stress plays an important role in tissue damage associated with hypoglycemia and other metabolic disorders. The altered brain neurotransmitters metabolism, cerebral electrolyte contents, and impaired blood-brain barrier function may contribute to CNS dysfunction in hypoglycemia. The present study elucidates the effect of starvation and insulin-induced hypoglycemia on the free radical scavanger system--reduced glutathione (GSH) content, glutathione S-transferase (GST), glutathione peroxidase (GPx), glutathione reductase (GR), gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma-GTP), gamma-glutamyl cystein synthetase (gamma-GCS), catalase and superoxide dismutase (SOD), and mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) complexes I-IV from three different regions of rat brain, namely cerebral hemispheres (CH), cerebellum (CB), and brainstem (BS). Peripheral organs, such as liver and kidney, were also studied. Significant changes in these enzymic activities were observed. The analysis of such alterations is important in ultimately determining the basis of neuronal dysfunction during metabolic stress conditions, such as hypoglycemia, and also defining the nature of these changes may help to develop therapeutic means to cure metabolically stressed tissues.
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PMID:Effect of starvation and insulin-induced hypoglycemia on oxidative stress scavenger system and electron transport chain complexes from rat brain, liver, and kidney. 1032 15

We investigated whether changes in apoptosis and cell proliferation induced by starvation and refeeding in rat liver may contribute to the initiation mechanism of liver cancer by 20 mg/kg of diethylnitrosamine (DENA). Rats were starved for 4 d, then refed and given 20 mg/kg of DENA after 1 d of refeeding. Rat livers were examined before and after DENA treatment to measure DNA loss and synthesis, the number of the placental form of glutathione S-transferase (P-GST) positive cells and their turnover. Four days of starvation depressed cell replication, as indicated by the labeling index (LI), and induced apoptosis, as shown by the decay of total DNA radioactivity and apoptotic index (AI, TUNEL technique). After 1 d of refeeding, AI significantly decreased and LI remained low, indicating that a high percentage of S phase cells was not required for the DNA damage due to 20 mg/kg of DENA. DENA induced apoptosis and the AI after 20 mg/kg of DENA was 3% in refed rats vs. 1% in fully-fed rats 5 d after DENA (P </= 0.05). Putative-initiated P-GST-positive hepatocytes appeared after administration of 20 mg/kg in refed rats, and they showed a higher LI (6%) than the surrounding P-GST-negative cells 3 d after DENA (LI = 2%; P </= 0.01), while very few P-GST-positive cells were found in fully-fed rats. These data indicate that starvation-induced cell loss and the subsequent refeeding trigger cell proliferation that gives a selective advantage to the cells initiated by 20 mg/kg of DENA to grow in the livers of refed rats.
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PMID:Apoptosis and cell proliferation are involved in the initiation of liver carcinogenesis by a subnecrogenic dose of diethylnitrosamine in refed rats. 1061 75

The expression of glutathione S-transferase (GST) is a crucial factor in determining the sensitivity of cells and organs in response to a variety of toxicants. Expression of class alpha GST genes by methyl-substituted thiazoles was assessed in the rat liver. Northern blot analysis revealed that 4-methylthiazole (4-MT) elevated rGSTA2, A3, A5 and M1 mRNAs in the liver by 19-, 4-, 6- and 9-fold at 24 h after treatment, respectively, as compared to control. Consecutive 3-day treatment with 4-MT resulted in 4- to 7-fold increases in rGSTA and M1 mRNAs. Multiple treatments with 5-methylthiazole (5-MT) caused marginal increases in GST mRNAs in spite of the large increases in certain GST mRNAs at 24 h. Either 4, 5-dimethylthiazole (DT) or 2,4,5-trimethylthiazole (TT) minimally affected the rGSTA and rGSTM mRNA expression at 1-3 day(s). Western blot analysis showed that 4-MT induced rGSTA1/2, rGSTA3/5 and rGSTM1 proteins by 2.6-, 2.1- and 2.1-fold at 3 days, respectively, while other methylthiazoles failed to induce the GST subunits. Starving rats were treated with a lower dose of methylthiazoles to study the role of oxidative stress in the mRNA expression. The levels in rGSTA2/3/5 mRNAs were significantly enhanced by 4-MT in starving rats, whereas rGSTM1/2 mRNAs were not further increased. Other methylthiazoles were inactive in enhancing the mRNAs in starving animals. Pretreatment of starving rats with either cysteine or methionine completely prevented the increases in class alpha GST mRNAs by 4-MT. Data showed that 4-MT induces class alpha GSTs with the increases in the mRNAs, whereas 5-methyl-, dimethyl- and trimethyl-substituted thiazoles were minimally active. Increases in the class alpha GST mRNAs by 4-MT may be associated with the oxidative stress in hepatocytes, as supported by starvation and sulfur amino acid experiments.
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PMID:Induction of class alpha glutathione S-transferases by 4-methylthiazole in the rat liver: role of oxidative stress. 1080 86

Coxiella burnetii is an obligate intracellular bacterium that resides in an acidified phagolysosome and has a remarkable ability to persist in the extracellular environment. C. burnetii has evolved a developmental cycle that includes at least two morphologic forms, designated large cell variants (LCV) and small cell variants (SCV). Based on differential protein expression, distinct ultrastructures, and different metabolic activities, we speculated that LCV and SCV are similar to typical logarithmic- and stationary-phase growth stages. We hypothesized that the alternate sigma factor, RpoS, a global regulator of genes expressed under stationary-phase, starvation, and stress conditions in many bacteria, regulates differential expression in life cycle variants of C. burnetii. To test this hypothesis, we cloned and characterized the major sigma factor, encoded by an rpoD homologue, and the stress response sigma factor, encoded by an rpoS homologue. The rpoS gene was cloned by complementation of an Escherichia coli rpoS null mutant containing an RpoS-dependent lacZ fusion (osmY::lacZ). Expression of C. burnetii rpoS was regulated by growth phase in E. coli (induced upon entry into stationary phase). A glutathione S-transferase-RpoS fusion protein was used to develop polyclonal antiserum against C. burnetii RpoS. Western blot analysis detected abundant RpoS in LCV but not in SCV. These results suggest that LCV and SCV are not comparable to logarithmic and stationary phases of growth and may represent a novel adaptation for survival in both the phagolysosome and the extracellular environment.
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PMID:Characterization of a stress-induced alternate sigma factor, RpoS, of Coxiella burnetii and its expression during the development cycle. 1144 63

We investigated the effects of several xenobiotics, including antimicrobial agents and general stress factors such as starvation, heat and osmotic shock, on the modulation of expression of Proteus mirabilis glutathione S-transferase B1-1 (PmGST B1-1). The level of expression of PmGST B1-1 was established by both Western- and Northern-blot experiments. Our results show that several compounds can modulate expression of PmGST B1-1. The level of PmGST B1-1 increased when bacterial cells were exposed to a variety of stresses such as 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene, H(2)O(2), fosfomycin or tetracycline. A knock-out gst B gene was also constructed using the suicide vector pKNOCKlox-Ap. Successful inactivation of the wild-type gene was confirmed by PCR, DNA sequence analysis and Western blotting. Under normal culture conditions, this mutant was viable and displayed no significant phenotypic differences compared with the wild-type. However, viability tests revealed that the null mutant was more sensitive to oxidative stress in the form of H(2)O(2) and to several antimicrobial drugs when compared with the wild-type. These results suggest that PmGST B1-1 has an active role in the protection against oxidative stress generated by H(2)O(2) and it appears to be involved in the detoxification of antimicrobial agents.
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PMID:Proteus mirabilis glutathione S-transferase B1-1 is involved in protective mechanisms against oxidative and chemical stresses. 1266 39


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